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18512

Review of the Developmental Toxicity and Teratogenicity of Three Environmental Contaminants (Cadmium, Lead and Mercury)

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Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

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Abstract

Heavy metals are among a large number of substances that exert adverse effects on embryonic development and human health. The large amount of heavy metals recently employed by modern industry produces a gradual increase of their concentrations in water, soils, and food. Embryos and fetuses are exposed every day to such toxic chemicals and other harmful substances in the air their mothers breathe, the food their mothers eat, the water their mothers drink, even in their mothers' milk. Exposure to these health hazards is putting embryos and newborns at risk for dangerous diseases and abnormal development. Even infant death and sudden infant death syndrome have been linked to toxic air. Therefore, the objective of this article was to illustrate the spectrum of developmental toxicity and teratogenicity (in experimental animals and human) resulting from exposure to cadmium, lead and mercury. A bibliography of many papers from different journals was generated from which appropriate data were presented. These data should provide a basis for predictions about types of malformations that might be expected in further studies and for judging postulated heavy metal-induced human birth defects. The following parameters were listed: 1) the developmental toxicity and teratogenicity of the chosen heavy metals (cadmium, lead and mercury) in experimental animal and human embryos, fetuses and newborns, 2) the mode of action and mechanism of their teratogenicity as well as the antagonism of their-induced teratogenic effects, 3) their transfer through placenta and breast milk, and 4) their bioaccumulation and toxicity in different body organs of vertebrates.

Keywords

bioaccumulation, Developmental toxicity, Heavy metals, Placental transfer, Teratogenic effect

Authors

First Name

Yomn

Last Name

Mobarak

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Al-Taif University, Al-Taif, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

Email

yomnmobarak@hotmail.com

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Orcid

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Volume

3

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

3859

Issue Date

2008-01-01

Receive Date

2018-11-07

Publish Date

2008-01-01

Page Start

31

Page End

43

Print ISSN

1687-5052

Online ISSN

2090-2786

Link

https://cat.journals.ekb.eg/article_18512.html

Detail API

https://cat.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=18512

Order

4

Type

Original Article

Type Code

644

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Catrina: The International Journal of Environmental Sciences

Publication Link

https://cat.journals.ekb.eg/

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023